View Single Post
  #2  
Old August 7th, 2006, 05:33 PM posted to rec.outdoors.fishing.bass
Bob La Londe
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,009
Default Stable car top boat?

wrote in message
ups.com...
Hi. I'm trying to find a good car top boat to use for fishing small and
medium sized lakes. I've searched through newsgroups but I'm still
confused about what would be the best choice. Here's what I'm looking
for:

1. Portability-- Sometimes I'll be using the boat alone so I'd like to
be able to lift it myself and car top it. I don't want to trailer it.


Jon Boat. If you have a pickup a plastic bass hunter you can side int he
back maybe. Easiest to load and unload... probably a canoe.



2. Stability-- The more stable the better. I'll be using it on some
medium sized lakes that are occasionally choppy. A canoe would not be
great. It would be nice to be able to stand and fish, but not crucial.


To stand and fish with some you can hand load yourself, you would be limited
to one of tyhe plastic bass boats. I stand and fish out of a jon boat, but
mine could never be loaded on a car top. I barely got it ont he trailer
when I bought it. If you don't mind sitting a wide beam lake canoe might be
an answer. I have one of those I got from my dad, and haven't experienced
anything I could nopt handle with it as long as I took appropriate
precautions. If that is not stable enough for you there are a couple
outrigger type stabilizer kits out there for canoes.


3. Other-- Would like to be able to use a small outboard (like 7hp) and
a trolling motor. The boat should be able to hold 2 people and gear.
Ideally, it would be somewhat comfortable.


Not able to run a 7 on any canoes I am aware of. Maybe not even on a jon
that you can cartop easily. Also, the Coleman crawdad I think has a 5hp
limit. From what I am hearing or not hearing in your post about load,
stability, and fishability you would probably want to look at a 5HP Briggs
and a boat like the Coleman Crawdad. As a plastic boat hough I would be a
little leary of cartopping it for fear of making it sag and indent from its
own weight on the roof racks. Perhaps if you put a piece of plywood up
there to support the whole boat.


A jon boat or a plastic boat like the Coleman Crawdad look like
possibilities, but I'm not sure if there are better options (like a
small v-hull?) given that the water may not always be calm.


There are some nice fishing boats that I really like, but the price starts
to go up and the ability to cartop them disappears. I really like the look
of the WaterQuest 11.3, but the best price I have found for it is a little
over $2000. It would also handle the bigger outboard you are looking at. I
would not try to cartop it though. I'ld buy a small short bunk jon boat
trailer for it, and maybe modify it with some bigger bunks to better support
the boat.

I understand that the perfect boat for these conditions may not
exist...


You are right. There is no such thing as the perfect boat. I have several
watercraft, and I still always seem to want one more. LOL.

Any ideas appreciated!


There are mine. Good luck.


--
Bob La Londe
www.YumaBassMan.com